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Concussion in Sport: Current Options for Assessment and Treatment Naomi L. Albertson, M.D. Family Medicine/Sports Medicine Reno Orthopaedic Clinic Objectives: ▪ Define concussion ▪ Define current available tools for evaluation ▪ Describe evidence and non-evidence based treatment options ▪ Case studies ▪ Discuss other concerns/Questions What the public knows… ▪ Class action lawsuit between the NFL and retired NFL players, their representatives and family members. The retired NFL players sued, accusing the NFL of not warning players and hiding the damages of brain inj ▪ The league estimates that 6,000 former players, or nearly three in 10, could develop Alzheimer’s disease or moderate dementia. NFL class action lawsuit (continued)… ▪ Senior U.S. District Judge Anita B. Brody steered the parties to mediation and approved the settlement in April, after persuading the NFL to remove a $765-million cap so the fund doesn't run out. April 18, 2016, the Third Circuit affirmed the District Court’s order in full. ▪ The settlement also sets aside money for baseline testing, education and research. ▪ Players would receive an average of $190,000, although the awards could reach several million dollars in the most serious cases. ▪ Appeals are still being addressed. Effective date has not yet been set. What we know… Concussion: Incidence ▪ Estimates range from 300,000 to 3.8 million sport related brain injuries every year in the U.S. ▪ Sports are second only to motor vehicle crashes as the leading cause of traumatic brain injury among people aged 15 to 24 years. Concussions increase during games ▪ Gessel et al 2007 ▪ 8.9% of all head injuries were concussion ▪ J. pediatrics Sept 2013 – 468 male football players ages 812 in PA ▪ More concussion in games than practice – 45% of concussions from head –to-head contact ▪ Incidence rate: – Incidence – Football > women’s soccer > men’s soccer ▪ Practice 0.24/1000 exposures ▪ Games 6.16/100 exposures What is a sports concussion? “a condition in which there is a traumatically induced alteration in mental status, with or without an associated loss of consciousness” Common Features of Concussion Second impact and CTE Second Impact Syndrome ▪ Second injury occurs before brain has healed from first injury ▪ More likely in kids/teens ▪ Mortality 50-100% ▪ Morbidity is severe – severe deficits ▪ Post Concussive syndrome – Symptoms beyond 3 months should not be assumed to be a slowly resolving concussion ▪ Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE) ▪ ▪ ▪ ▪ Significant similarities to Alzheimers Motor symptoms Cognitive symptoms Psychiatric symptoms How do you make the diagnosis? ▪ HISTORY – what happened? – where was the impact? – Any prior head injury? Had it completely resolved before this injury? – Prior neurologic conditions? – Was there LOC? – Was there retrograde amnesia? – Fogginess and/or migraine like symptoms? Physical Examination: ▪ 1) Trauma? MUST CLEAR NECK!!! ▪ 2) Neurovestibular system: – Smooth pursuit (H test): follow examiners finger in H – see if it elicits symptoms – Saccades –horizontal/vertical: examiner holds 2 fingers out in horizontal or vertical plane and patient moves head back and forth or up and down to view fingers – Vestibulo-occular (VOR) – horizontal/vertical : patient holds thumb out in front of them and moves head side to side or up and down while keeping gaze on thumb. – Balance More examination… ▪ 3) Ophtho: – Optokinetic stimulation: patient holds thumb out to one side and twists body from left to right while staring at thumb – Convergence: dot on stick and bring from far to near – when patient has an eye that moves laterally or when they see 2, measure the distance (>5 cm is abnormal) – Accomodation: visual acuity test What about labs and imaging??? ▪ Labs: biomarkers may play a role in the future, no current concensus on use. ▪ Imaging: – CT scan – MRI – rarely useful, rarely necessary – Functional MRI (research only) Other tests: Neurocognitive evaluation ▪ ImPACT – Immediate Post-Concussion Assessment and Cognitive Testing – University of Pittsburgh, web-based, valid and reliable (if baseline is available) ▪ ANAM- Automated Neuropsychological Assessment Metrics – US Army developed, web-based, valid and reliable, 22 tests, sited in over 300 research articles ▪ HeadMinder – US Army developed (replaced by ANAM) ▪ CogState/AXON- CCAT (Computerized Cognitive Assessment Test) ImPACT: Immediate Post-Concussion Assessment and Cognitive Testing ▪ Pro’s: – Web-based – Cheap – Easy to administer and easy to follow with serial tests – Reliably tests memory, attention, brain processing speed, reaction time, and post-concussion symptoms ▪ Con’s: - Needs to be administered and interpreted - Not valid for athletes < age 10 or without a baseline test - Expense Treatment: is there anything to do? ▪ Physical and cognitive rest? ▪ Exercise? ▪ Educate? ▪ Hydrate? ▪ Medicines? ▪ Physical therapy? ▪ Secondary injury (i.e. whiplash, etc.) Recovery ▪ Majority (80-90%) resolve in short (7-10 day) period, 15% will go on to develop post-concussive syndrome ▪ May take longer in children, girls and adolescents ▪ Will take longer with prior injuries and/or if prior concussion symptoms had not already resolved (i.e. second impact syndrome) ▪ Prolonged symptoms may also occur in athletes with underlying sleep disturbance, neurologic condition or learning disability Current consensus on treatment • CORNERSTONE = initial period of rest Physical Rest No playing, exercise, weight lifting Beware of exertion with activities of daily living Cognitive Rest No television, extensive reading, video games, cell phones/ texting, etc. What about other treatments? 1) Daily movement – walk everyday, vestibular therapy if needed 2) Eat a healthy diet and drink plenty of water, avoid caffeine/etOH 3) Do NOT nap, follow regular sleep schedules 4) Avoid aggravating symptoms (i.e. texting, tv, computer use, etc.) 5) Medications may be needed and should be considered when symptoms are prolonged. Medications ▪ Headache: Acetaminophen and NSAIDs: – NO studies that evaluate the use of either for symptomatic relief. – NO studies that document any harmful effect of NSAID use such as increased risk of subdural hematomas. – Good evidence to support NOT using chronic NSAIDs as they can cause headaches ▪ Ami and Nortriptyline: – “off label use” for headache prevention. A retrospective chart review at a regional concussion center found 17% were treated with amitriptyline and 82% of them had improvement of symptoms. Unfortunately 23% noted over sedation, irritability, heart palpitations and vivid dreams. No controlled studies. Return to Learn… - Driving? - School – middle school? high school? - WCSD requires 90% attendance to matriculate to next grade. Concussion is a medical excuse and IF WORK IS MADE UP for days missed they are NOT counted toward days missed. - 504 plan covers students who are not eligible for an individualized education plan but who require academic modification because of a documented medical condition (WCSD) OR who will NOT be able to make up their work - Individualized education plan (IEP) is protected under the individuals with Disabilities Education Act (consider for post concussive syndrome) Management ▪ Expect gradual resolution within 7-10 days ▪ Gradual return to school and social activities that does not result in significant exacerbation of symptoms ▪ Proceed through step-wise return to sport / play (RTP) strategy and Return to learn protocols AFTER obtaining medical clearance by a trained physician, nurse or physician assistant Graduated Return to Play CDC – “Heads UP program” or Zurich protocol Rehabilitation stage Functional exercise at each stage of rehabilitation Objective of each stage 1. No activity Symptom limited physical and cognitive rest. Recovery 2.Light aerobic exercise Walking, swimming or stationary cycling keeping intensity < 70% MPHR No resistance training. Increase HR 3.Sport-specific exercise Skating drills in ice hockey, running drills in soccer. No head impact activities. Add movement 4.Non-contact training drills Progression to more complex training drills e.g. passing drills in football and ice hockey. May start progressive resistance training Exercise, coordination, and cognitive load 5.Full contact practice Following medical clearance participate in normal training activities Restore confidence and assess functional skills by coaching staff 6.Return to play Normal game play • 24 hours per step (therefore about 1 week for full protocol) • If recurrence of symptoms at any stage, return to previous asymptomatic level and resume after further 24 hr period of rest Graduated return to academics Stage Activity 1. Complete cognitive rest NO reading, TV, texting, schoolwork, video games or loud noises 2. Introduction of cognitive tasks (to begin when headache free for 24 hours) Add 30 minutes at a time of the above tasks, no more than 2 hours total/day 3. Progress cognitive tasks Total of 4 hours/day of above tasks 4. Half day school NO homework NO more than 1 hour cognitive activity at home 5. Full day school Same as 4. Resume normal cognitive activity Include homework and normal school activities Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) ▪ Acknowledge potential for long-term problems in all athletes ▪ CTE unknown incidence in athletic populations What’s on the horizon? ▪ Dr. Leddy at University of Buffalo 2015 ongoing research to investigate the use of an exercise program after concussion for shortening the duration and intensity of symptoms – final paper pending. ▪ Protective equipment: no helmet, mouthguard or headband to date has been shown to reduce the incidence of concussion ▪ There are many new helmet companies on the horizon…none with data to back their use yet. ▪ Force detectors have been imbedded in many helmets - to date we do not know what to do with the data. Case 2: SYFL player ▪ 9 year old male football player collided with another player and felt immediately “foggy” ▪ Coach pulled him out of play and told him to “get cleared” before returning to practice. Case 2 ▪ 1 week later he is in your office with his parents. ▪ Current symptoms: – Mild headache after school day but really nauseated during recess – Sleeping more than usual – Seems more irritable to father ▪ Physical Exam: – C-spine: normal exam – Neuro: no deficits, vision test is abnormal and causes nausea with testing, convergence at 11 cm ▪ Impression: ??? ▪ Can you clear him? ▪ What advise do you give the athlete and his family about academics? About athletics? ▪ When do you want to see him back? ▪ Any other tests you want to do? Case 2: 2 weeks from time of injury ▪ History: ▪ Impression: ??? ▪ Symptoms are much improved but still very tired at the end of the day. ▪ Can you clear him? ▪ Mother noted that he failed his spelling test (never less than 100% prior to tbi). ▪ What advise do you give the athlete and his family about academics? About athletics? ▪ When do you want to see him back? ▪ Any other tests you want to do? Case 2: 3 weeks from injury ▪ History: ▪ Impression: ??? ▪ Symptoms are completely gone, athlete is back to himself (Self and parent report) ▪ Can you clear him? ▪ No activities other than walking ▪ Has been able to go to school and feels good – back to 100% on spelling tests. ▪ What advise do you give the athlete and his family about athletics? ▪ When do you want to see him back? ▪ 4th International Conference on Concussion in Sport held in Zurich, November 2012 ▪ ACSM 2011 Updates ▪ NIAA Rules: www.niaa.com/sports/niaa ▪ imPACTtest.com ▪ www.cdc.gov/headsup ▪ Barlow KM et al. A double-blind, placebo-controlled intervention trial of 3 and 10 mg sublingual melatonin for post-concussion syndrome in youths. Trials. 2014; 15:271 ▪ Fisher B, et al. Hypertonic saline lowers raised intracranial pressure in children after head trauma. J Neurosurg Anesthesiol. 1992;4: 4-10 ▪ Heyer GL, Idris SA. Does analgesic overuse contribute to chronic post-traumatic headache in adolescent concussion patients? Pediatr Neurol. 2014;50: 458-461 ▪ Naomi Albertson, M.D. : phone: 307-200-1690 (cell), [email protected]